Alternate Citation Formats

An of version 3.23 (September, 2013), alternate formats for all citations are available. This lets you cut-and-paste text from Flutopedia into the reference list of your publication or for citations on Wikipedia.
Formats are linked directly after each citation to their corresponding entry on another web page in the specific format. Note that these alternate citation formats do not have links to
Google Scholar () or any content
( and
buttons). The alternate formats are:

Flutopedia style citation, with no Abstract or auxiliary information. These are generally more verbose and descriptive than the other formats. All titles in Title Case. Examples:

Chicago 16th edition / Turabian 7th edition style citations. The author-date sub-format is used.
Generally used in Business, History, and the Fine Arts. The author-date sub-format has long been used in the physical, natural, and social sciences.
This is a documentation syle that has been published by the Chicago University Press since 1906.
This citation style incorporates rules of grammer and punctutation common in American English. See The Chicago Manual of Style Online. All titles in Title Case. Examples:

BibTeX formation citations are under development.
The core reference document for BibTeX format is
[Patashnik 1988].
Note that we do not assume that the use of the LaTeX “url” package, which is often used to improve the formatting of web addresses.
If you use “\usepackage{url}” in your LaTeX source code preamble, then you may wish to convert occurances of “http:…” to
“\url{http:…}”.
Some examples: